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A review by niallgoulding1
Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.25
Mixed feelings about this. I found the book very odd.
In one sense, I can see why it is so well loved. Murakami writes beautifully. He writes through the eyes of a teenage boy dealing (or not dealing) with his childhood friends suicide. In this I think the author is successful as you feel like you're inside the characters head and they're are some beautifully insightful sections on grief and isolation. I can see why someone who feels a little bit lost or out of kilter with the world might feel heard by this book.
However, as many have commented before some of the events of the story are just bizarre. You could argue that some of this is the author reflecting a teenage boys mindset (i.e. the female characters are 2d heroines in need of rescuing not due to bad writing but rather because that is how the central character perceives them). However, that's undercut by sections which demonstrate a really weird relationship with women in general and don't orginate from the mouth of the protagonist. In particular, the scene where a 13 year old girl basically seduces and sexually assaults an adult woman is beyond the pale and served no purpose that I could see. Equally the ending where the protagonist continues to be irrestible to every woman he meets for no apparent reason seemed like fanfic.
Even a month later I'm not sure what to make of this book. Just a strange experience
In one sense, I can see why it is so well loved. Murakami writes beautifully. He writes through the eyes of a teenage boy dealing (or not dealing) with his childhood friends suicide. In this I think the author is successful as you feel like you're inside the characters head and they're are some beautifully insightful sections on grief and isolation. I can see why someone who feels a little bit lost or out of kilter with the world might feel heard by this book.
However, as many have commented before some of the events of the story are just bizarre. You could argue that some of this is the author reflecting a teenage boys mindset (i.e. the female characters are 2d heroines in need of rescuing not due to bad writing but rather because that is how the central character perceives them). However, that's undercut by sections which demonstrate a really weird relationship with women in general and don't orginate from the mouth of the protagonist. In particular, the scene where a 13 year old girl basically seduces and sexually assaults an adult woman is beyond the pale and served no purpose that I could see. Equally the ending where the protagonist continues to be irrestible to every woman he meets for no apparent reason seemed like fanfic.
Even a month later I'm not sure what to make of this book. Just a strange experience
Graphic: Adult/minor relationship, Mental illness, Suicidal thoughts, and Suicide